THE ROYAL ARCHAEOLOGICAL INSTITUTE. 195 length ; a swurd broken into four pieces, point missing. See Arch. Journ., Vol. X., pp, 6*J, 70, for an account of the discovery of bronze objects at a spot close to that from which Mr. I'cpys brought those shown by him. Many of the celts are there figured. By Mr. F. Ludu Flint, through Mr. T. Dodd. — A Roman fibula, with enamel, of good but not uncommon tyj)e, found at Canterbury. — Minia- ture bust in terra cotta, of a holmeted head, not antique. — Copper coin of Constantinc. — A thin j)icce of deal wood, shaped apparently to fit as a lid of a box, 2^ inches by 1 inch in gi-eatest breadth, on which is fixed a strip of thin metal, with a male and female figure roughly engraved thereon in the costume of the early part of the eighteenth century, probably German.